Independent circuits in basal ganglia and cortex for the processing of reward and precision feedback
David Pascucci, Clayton Hickey, Jorge Jovicich, Massimo Turatto

TL;DR
This study used fMRI to investigate how different brain regions process reward and precision feedback during decision making, revealing a double dissociation in neural responses to these feedback types.
Contribution
It demonstrates a double dissociation between brain regions for reward and precision feedback, highlighting distinct neural circuits involved in goal-directed behavior.
Findings
Dorsal striatum responds to precision feedback independent of reward.
Frontal and posterior cingulate regions respond to reward but not precision.
VS is activated by both reward and precision feedback, with sensitivity linked to personality traits.
Abstract
In order to understand human decision making it is necessary to understand how the brain uses feedback to guide goal-directed behavior. The ventral striatum (VS) appears to be a key structure in this function, responding strongly to explicit reward feedback. However, recent results have also shown striatal activity following correct task performance even in the absence of feedback. This raises the possibility that, in addition to processing external feedback, the dopamine-centered reward circuit might regulate endogenous reinforcement signals, like those triggered by satisfaction in accurate task performance. Here we use functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to test this idea. Participants completed a simple task that garnered both reward feedback and feedback about the precision of performance. Importantly, the design was such that we could manipulate information about the…
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